George Woodward Warder (May 20, 1848 - February 8, 1907) was an American lawyer and real estate magnate who wrote extensively on his personal cosmology of an electric universe, which included speculation that "the sun is a vast generator of electric currents which cause heat in the atmosphere of the planets only where it is needed,"[3] that electro-magnetic, atomic, and spiritual force are the only forces in the universe (abandoning gravitation entirely), and that the sun is habitable and likely to be Heaven itself, as described in the Book of Revelation.

Selected Bibliography

Warder, George Woodward (1895), After Which All Things; or, Footprints and Shadows, New York: G.W. Dillingham

References

↑"Obituary Notice for George W. Warder", Chillicothe Constitution-Tribune (Chillicothe, Missouri): 2, 1907-02-08, https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/7875064/, retrieved 2016-08-13, "Funeral services, for the late George W. Warder, who died at Kansas City Friday, will take place from the home of his stepfather, Judge W. C. Samuel, East Jackson street, Sunday afternoon at 1:30. Brief services will be in charge of Mr. J. N. Crutcher and burial will be made at Edgewood cemetery."